Austin American-Statesman

Analysis: Senate bill hikes taxes for 13.8M

- By Marcy Gordon

Promoted as needed relief for the mid- dle class, the Senate Republican tax overhaul actually would increase taxes for some 13.8 million moder- ate-income American house- holds, a bipartisan analysis showed Monday.

The assessment by Congress’ nonpartisa­n Joint Committee on Taxation emerged as the Senate’s tax-writing committee began wading through the measure, work- ing toward the first major revamp of the tax system in some 30 years.

Barging into the care- fully calibrated work that House and Senate Republican­s have done, President Donald Trump called for a steeper tax cut for wealthy Americans and pressed GOP leaders to add a contentiou­s health care change to the already complex mix.

Tr u mp’s latest tweet injected a dose of uncer- tainty into the process as the Republican­s try to deliver on his top legislativ­e priority. He commended GOP lead- ers for getting the tax legislatio­n closer to passage in recent weeks and then said, “Cut top rate to 35% w/all of the rest going to middle income cuts?”

That puts him at odds with the House legislatio­n that leaves the top rate at 39.6 percent and the Senate bill as written, with the top rate at 38.5 percent.

Overall, the legislatio­n would deeply cut corporate taxes, double the standard deduction used by most Americans, and limit or repeal completely the federal deduction for state and local property, income and sales taxes. It carries high political stakes for Trump and Republican leaders in Congress, who view passage of tax cuts as critical to the GOP preserving its majorities at the polls next year.

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